greatwall
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@Benon_UgCFC We're not hooligans we're THE GUNNERS! get that right
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@Dangerousgroun2 You can write that down on a piece of paper and roll it well then shove it up your ass😂
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@iamdebbieart @Cristiano @AlNassrFC Good job.... Although you can use stencil for proportions next time
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@KenyanSays Aiiiiiiii someone get that b*tch pregnant awache kutusumbua nonsense!
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For now, Kenyans must accept a painful truth.
The traditional media we grew up trusting has been captured.
When advertising money from government becomes the leash, journalism stops being journalism. It becomes survival.
Stations that question power suddenly lose government adverts. Those who cooperate are rewarded. Those who resist are starved.
This is not speculation. It is the quiet reality many editors whisper about but rarely say openly.
Under William Ruto, the state has mastered a simple formula: control the money, control the message. The Fourth Estate is no longer a watchdog it is being forced into becoming a megaphone.
And when the watchdog is chained, the truth finds another path.
That path today is social media.
It is messy. It is chaotic. But it is the only remaining space where ordinary Kenyans can speak without waiting for permission from advertisers, government officials, or newsroom executives afraid of losing funding.
That is why the political class fears it so much.
Because on social media there is no state advertising budget to withdraw.
No editor to intimidate.
No boardroom where truth can be negotiated.
Just citizens.
Until Kenya breaks free from a system where power buys silence, we must understand something clearly:
The fight for truth has moved.
Not in the studios.
Not in the polished prime-time interviews.
But in the phones of millions of Kenyans who refuse to be quiet.
For now, Kenya’s real newsroom is the people.
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